Gardening & The Coach Houseescape To The Chatea... -

For Dick and Angel, the garden is a living gallery. Whether it’s Dick’s engineering-led irrigation or Angel’s eye for floral design, the garden is where their distinct personalities merge. The Philosophy of the "Slow Build"

This architectural pivot highlights a central theme of the show: . By stripping back the rot and honoring the original timber and masonry, the project reflects the human desire to preserve the soul of a place while breathing new life into its lungs. The Garden: The Living Canvas

Historically, a coach house was a functional space, designed for the storage of carriages and the housing of horses. In the Martels’ journey, it represents the first bridge between the "uninhabitable" and the "home." Unlike the main chateau, which often feels like a museum of past lives, the Coach House restoration is a deeply personal endeavor. It is where the family first creates a self-contained living space, turning cold stone and centuries of dust into a warm, lime-washed sanctuary. Gardening & the Coach HouseEscape to the Chatea...

The Coach House isn't just a building, and the garden isn't just a collection of plants; they are manifestations of a family’s grit. They prove that to truly "escape," one must be willing to build their own exits—one stone, one seed, and one season at a time.

The creation of the potager (kitchen garden) serves several narrative and philosophical purposes: For Dick and Angel, the garden is a living gallery

In the chateau lifestyle, time is measured not by clocks, but by the harvest. The garden dictates the menu, the chores, and the mood of the household.

If the Coach House is the sanctuary, the garden is the dialogue between the family and the land. Gardening at the chateau is not merely about aesthetics; it is about . The "Escape" isn’t just a move to France; it is an escape from the industrial food chain and the frenetic pace of modern life. By stripping back the rot and honoring the

The appeal of Escape to the Chateau lies not just in the grand scale of the Martels’ 45-room French residence, but in the intimate, gritty restoration of its outbuildings—most notably the . Within the context of the series, the transformation of the Coach House and its surrounding gardens serves as a profound metaphor for reclaiming one’s legacy and the restorative power of manual labor. The Coach House: From Utility to Sanctuary